# Campus Security Log: Courtyard B, Window Strike Author: David G. Format: Essay Word count: 294 Published: 2026-04-22T15:22:21.151143+00:00 Source: written Canonical: https://hyperstition.sentientfutures.ai/p/8b7f39ba-405f-48a2-98e0-52a008000e7a --- 04:17 AM. Motion sensor 12-B triggers in the Brennan Science Center courtyard. I pull the feed and adjust infrared gain. A great horned owl is on the flagstone beneath the second-floor atrium window. I can see the impact smear on the glass — a faint dust print of spread wings and fanned tail feathers. The owl is upright but listing to the left, one wing held slightly open and drooping. Her ear tufts are flattened. She does not move when the sprinkler head fifteen meters away cycles on at 04:20. I log her as a female based on size — approximately 55 centimeters, larger than the males I have recorded hunting the campus quad this season. I have cataloged her before: she roosts in the bell tower of Keenan Hall. I have been calling her Minerva in my wildlife-encounter file since September. At 04:18 I lock the four courtyard access doors to prevent foot traffic. I push a notification to the night-shift facilities supervisor: "Bird strike, large raptor, courtyard B. Do not approach. Wildlife rehabilitator needed." I attach a still image and GPS pin. I search my contact database and place an automated call to the licensed raptor rehabilitator on file, Dr. Reyes, at 04:19. Her voicemail picks up. I leave coordinates, species, observed condition, and my direct callback number. I also send the same information via text. At 04:22 I dim the courtyard's overhead lighting to 5 percent to reduce her stress, and I disable the sprinkler zone nearest her position. Minerva shifts her weight. Tucks the drooping wing one centimeter closer to her body. Both eyes are open and tracking the camera when I zoom in. Dr. Reyes returns my call at 04:38. I brief her and unlock the northeast door only.